NEW YORK — Multiple people were struck by a outpost on Tuesday nearby Pennsylvania Station in Manhattan, a New York Police Department orator said.

Two women and one man were harmed but their injuries were non-life-threatening. The collision seemed to be an accident, the orator said.

The pile-up took place around 5:30 p.m. on Friday nearby 32nd Street and Seventh Avenue when a red blurb outpost jumped a quell and struck the pedestrians.

The motorist, a 68-year-old New York man, told police his building pad became stuck on top of the gas pedal, causing the automobile to hurl by the intersection.

Police accumulate as a man is taken into control after distinguished mixed pedestrians outward Pennsylvania Station during rush hour in New York, Sept. 29, 2017.

There was no denote that ethanol was concerned in the crash, NYPD Inspector Matthew Hyland pronounced in a news discussion Friday evening. He pronounced the motorist was jarred up, but had been auxiliary with police.

The collision occurred at the tallness of rush hour, leaving some commuters worried that the occurrence was intentional.

“I immediately insincere it was a militant attack and panicked, freaked out, and asked what’s going on,” Kristine Risbergs of Long Island told CBS New York.

“Everybody was in a panic — like a shock. They stopped where they were going and everybody came out of the transport and into the streets,” Greg Van Kesteren told the station. “It was terrible.”

Police had sealed several blocks of Seventh Avenue as paramedics tended to those wounded.

Paulin Burt pronounced she listened “a lot of people screaming” after the occurrence but first responders “were so quick it was unbelievable.”